The Borneo Post

Rescued from extinction, bison rediscover Romania mountains

- Mihaela Rodina

They change the landscape and architectu­re of the forest by stopping the spread of invasive tree species, spreading seeds for hundreds of plants and creating paths smaller animals use to access food.

Marina Druga

ARMENIS, Romania: Hoof prints in the mud, tree bark nibbled away: even if the newest residents of Romania’s Carpathian mountain forest shy away from visitors, their traces are there for those who know where to look.

They are signs of the success of a project to reintroduc­e bison to this region after a centuriesl­ong absence, key to keeping the hairy giants off lists of critically endangered species.

Bison had all but been driven out of Europe by hunting and the destructio­n of its habitats, but their reappearan­ce in Romania has brought back a key component of the region’s ecosystem.

Under gentle autumn sunshine on the edge of a centuries-old wood, young forest warden Matei Miculescu is on the lookout for members of the Carpathian herd.

The animals can be hard to spot, having been tempted further into the forest by the abundant vegetation and the possibilit­y of extending their habitat.

Miculescu says the animals are thriving in the forest, in contrast to captivity which ‘creates the risk of inbreeding’ and weakens their chances of survival.

Nowadays, around 6,000 bison, Europe’s largest mammal and a distant cousin of the American buffalo, can be found on the continent.

Most of them are on the PolishBela­russian border where efforts to revive the population got underway in the 1950s.

Romania welcomed bison back in 2014 in the southweste­rn Armenis region, more than 200 years after it was last seen there.

Born in captivity in other parts of Europe – where they had been given names like Kiwi, Bilbo and Mildred – they were transferre­d to Romania in 16 separate stages.

Cutting human links

Thanks to successful reproducti­on in the wild, “around 105 bison now live freely in the Tarcu mountains and have settled in well,” says Marina Druga, head of the project led jointly by the WWF and Rewilding Europe.

“In the past two years, there haven’t been any deaths in their ranks,” says Druga, explaining that the goal is to get to a population ‘of 250 individual­s in five years’ time’.

The programme is well establishe­d: first the animals spend several weeks being reacclimat­ised to life in the wild and are only then released and

left to fend for themselves.

They can currently be found making use of around 8,000 hectares in a protected area which stretches over 59,000 hectares.

The southern Carpathian­s present ideal conditions: “a vast region with a thinly spread human population and no intensive agricultur­e,” says Wanda Olech-Piasecka from the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN).

Since 2014 there have been 38 bison calves born in the area.

“Without them, the project would have no future,” says Miculescu, who recognises each of the creatures by their horns of the colour of their fur. But those running the project have resisted giving the calves names.

Since they have been born in the wild, all links with humans should be cut, explains Druga.

Architects of the forest

The WWF says the next step to make the population viable in the long term will be to introduce bison into other parts of the Carpathian­s and establish a network of population­s.

Over the long term, the animals need a large habitat in order avoid conflict over territory with human population­s or within their own herds.

Along with benefittin­g the bison themselves, advocates say that this example of ‘rewilding’ is also a boon for the wider ecosystem, bringing benefits for some 600 species from microorgan­isms to large carnivores.

“They change the landscape and architectu­re of the forest by stopping the spread of invasive tree species, spreading seeds for hundreds of plants and creating paths smaller animals use to access food,” explains Druga.

Weaker or sick members of the herd can themselves serve as prey for wolves or bears, who in turn will be less likely to stray into human settlement­s in search of food, a problem which has grown in recent years in Romania.

Even those who watch them closely have sometimes been surprised by the effects the bison’s presence can have.

“Birds collect discarded bits of fur to isolate their nests while frogs can use bison hoof prints to jump from one pond to another,” says Miculescu.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? A panoramic view of the Tarcu mountains, a wild area where bisons live, next to the Armenis village, south of Timisoara, Romania.
— AFP photos A panoramic view of the Tarcu mountains, a wild area where bisons live, next to the Armenis village, south of Timisoara, Romania.
 ?? ?? European bisons stand at the Magura Zimbrilor reintroduc­ing area.
European bisons stand at the Magura Zimbrilor reintroduc­ing area.
 ?? ?? European bisons walk at the Magura Zimbrilor reintroduc­ing area.
European bisons walk at the Magura Zimbrilor reintroduc­ing area.
 ?? ?? European bisons fight at the Magura Zimbrilor reintroduc­ing area.
European bisons fight at the Magura Zimbrilor reintroduc­ing area.
 ?? ?? European bison is released from a transport box.
European bison is released from a transport box.
 ?? ?? European bison is released from a truck.
European bison is released from a truck.

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